Posted on 30.09.2012 and 21.11.2013
Among the sites included in 2011 by UNESCO in its list of World Heritage Sites is one called Prehistoric Pile dwellings around the Alps, which contains, as say its name, pile-dwelling settlements in and around the Alps, built on the edges of lakes, rivers or wetlands. So far have been identified 937 such sites, of which UNESCO has chosen 111, located in Austria (5), France (11), Germany (18), Italy (19), Slovenia (2), and Switzerland (56).
These settlements were built between 5,000 and 500 BC, i.e. during Neolithic and Bronze Age, a period about which we know little, but for which clarification would be an important step in finding our origins as Europeans. For now it is clear that at the end of the Neolithic has occurred a profound transformation, due to the penetration in Europe of a Proto-Indo-European populations wave, named by Marija Gimbutas Kurgan Culture. Equally clear is that these populations, more warlike and technologically superior to the ones found in Europe, were imposed and caused a cultural leap.
Unclear is whether the Indo-Europeans exterminated the populations which they have found here or just conquered their territories and assimilated them. Perhaps some will find unimportant this "detail". To me it seems important to know if in our veins flowing those people's blood or not. To those uninterested in this aspect, I tell just that to drive safely on the history's highway, is needed not only a large windscreen, clear and clean, but also a proper rearview mirror.
Undoubtedly UNESCO involvement will positively influence the extent of archaeological research in the area, but probably the answer to this question can't be given than with the help of genetics. For now, UNESCO say only "The exceptional conservation conditions for organic materials provided by the waterlogged sites, combined with extensive under-water archaeological investigations and research in many fields of natural science, such as archaeobotany and archaeozoology, over the past decades, has combined to present an outstanding detailed perception of the world of early agrarian societies in Europe. The precise information on their agriculture, animal husbandry, development of metallurgy, over a period of more than four millennia, coincides with one of the most important phases of recent human history: the dawn of modern societies." Which isn’t at all less, but neither enough it isn't.
Obviously, the dwellings from the first postcard it isn't an original one, but a reconstruction done to a Park and Archaeological Museum Laténium, located in Hauterive, a suburb of Neuchâtel (Switzerland), and the ones from the second postcards are a computer animation of some dwellings which are nowadays on the bottom of the Keutschacher See, a lake in Carinthia (Austria).
About the stamp
On the first postcard
I've never seen by now a stamp with a caricature, but that doesn't mean much, because I'm not philatelist. Well, the stamp that it used Zasa Lein even this is: a caricature. One that fits beautifully with the subject of this year's Europa stamps, respectively Visit... For a country like Switzerland, known for its natural wonders, but also for its people, cities and villages, I would have expected to something about them. To my pleasant surprise, it went out far beyond the clichés, and I would have expected to take one of the awards of Best Europa Stamp Contest. Commission wasn't of the same opinion. Neither this year. Obviously, we haven't the same criteria.
On the second postcard
The stamp is the third of the series Austrian Photographic Art, begun in 2011. If the one from 2012 was dedicated to Elfie Semotan (I wrote here about it), the one from this year, issued on March 13, 2013, was dedicated to Valie Export and one of her emblematic works, VALIE EXPORT - SMART EXPORT.
This is a post for Sunday Stamps #90, run by Viridian from Viridian’s Postcard Blog. The theme of this week is Anything you wish. Click on the button to visit Viridian’s blog and all the other participants.
References
Prehistoric pile dwellings around the Alps - Wikipedia
Prehistoric Pile dwellings around the Alps - UNESCO official site
Laténium - Official site
Civilizaţie şi cultură, by Marija Gimbutas - Ed. Meridiane, Bucureşti, 1989
Europa postage stamps - Wikipedia
sender: Zasa Lein (direct swap)
sent from Bern (Switzerland), on 20.05.2012
sender: Nina Kramlinger (direct swap)
sent from Vienna (Austria), on 18.11.2013